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8.8
Changing demographics of the world Christian movement from 1900 to 2050
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Figure III.1
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Nine cultural‐geographic mega‐regions of the world
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Figure III.2
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Where the world’s Christians live
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Figure 9.1
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The Middle East and North Africa: global location and population information
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Figure 9.2
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Regional map of the Middle East and North Africa
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Figure 9.3
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Map showing overlap of Muslim, Arab, and formerly Ottoman territory in the Middle East and North Africa
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Figure 9.4
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Map showing nineteenth‐ and twentieth‐century European colonization of the Middle East and North Africa
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Figure 9.5
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Christian profile of the Middle East and North Africa
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Figure 9.6
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Icon of the Christian martyrs killed on a beach in Libya in 2015 portrayed as saints
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Figure 9.7
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Coptic Pope Tawadros II appearing in church with Egyptian President al‐Sisi in January 2018
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Figure 9.8
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Survivors of the Armenian genocide pose with a pyramid of skulls of those who died
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Figure 10.1
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Eastern Europe: global location and population information
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Figure 10.2
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Regional map of Eastern Europe
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Figure 10.3
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Christian profile of Eastern Europe, showing approximate percentage of the region’s total Christian population in each of the four Christian mega‐traditions
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Figure 10.4
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Three religious sub‐regions in Eastern Europe
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Figure 10.5
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The Church of St. Sava dwarfs nearby buildings in Belgrade, Serbia
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Figure 10.6
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Icon of the Black Madonna of Czestochowa
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Figure 10.7
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The Lord’s Ark Catholic Church (Nowa Huta, Poland)
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Figure 10.8
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Map of Poland showing area of main support for the Law and Justice Party and areas voting to be “LGBT‐free” zones
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Figure 10.9
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Cathedral of Christ the Savior being demolished by Stalin in December 1931 and reconstructed in 2000
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Figure 10.10
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Current cultural and political map of Ukraine showing areas of Russian control and influence
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Figure 11.1
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Central and South Asia: global location and population information
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Figure 11.2
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Regional map of Central and South Asia
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Figure 11.3
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Christian profile of Central and South Asia showing approximate percentage of the region’s Christian population in each of the four Christian mega‐traditions
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Figure 11.4
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Map showing areas in Central and South Asia where Christians are more densely clustered
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Figure 11.5
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Map of the seven eastern states of India showing percentage of the population that is Christian
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Figure 11.6
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Protesters in Pakistan in 2018 after the acquittal of Aasia Bibi, a Christian woman who had been accused of breaking the nation’s law against blasphemy
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Figure 11.7
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Chart showing divisions of the original St. Thomas Christian community of India into the seven currently existing denominations that claim this heritage
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Figure 11.8
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Inside of Mother Teresa’s Home for the Dying in Kolkata, India
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Figure 12.1
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Western Europe: global location and population information
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Figure 12.2
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Regional map of Western Europe
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Figure 12.3
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Christian profile of Western Europe showing approximate percentage of the region’s total Christian population represented by each of the four Christian mega‐traditions
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Figure 12.4
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Distribution of Christian populations in Western Europe
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Figure 12.5
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Anticlerical Republicans “execute” a statue of the Sacred Heart of Jesus at Cerro de los Angeles during the Spanish Civil War
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Figure 12.6
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Catholic prolife rally in Madrid with banners that are explicitly anti‐PSOE and pro‐PP
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Figure 12.7
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Muslims on the streets of Paris during Friday noontime prayers
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Figure 12.8
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Ordination of Elizabeth Jane Holden Lane as the first female bishop in the Church of England (January 26, 2015)
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Figure 12.9
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Map of Germany showing major cities and the sub‐regions that are predominantly Catholic, Protestant, and non‐religious
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Figure 13.1
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Sub‐Saharan Africa: global location and population information
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